PEOPLE V. BARRAZA
23 Cal.3d 675, 591 P.2d 947 (1979)
NATURE OF THE CASE: Barraza (D) appealed his conviction on two counts of selling heroin.
FACTS: A police officer testified that D sold her a yellow balloon containing heroin for
$25. D gave a different account of his interaction with the narcotics agent on that date,
contradicting her testimony that a sale of heroin had occurred. As for a second sale of
heroin on September 11, 1975; both the female agent and D testified that the agent tried to
contact D by telephoning the Golden State Mental Health Detoxification Center, where he
worked as a patient care technician, several times during the three weeks between the dates
of the two alleged heroin sale transactions. The agent finally succeeded in speaking to D
and asked him if he had 'anything'; D asked her to come to the detoxification center. D was
hesitant to deal because 'he had done a lot of time in jail and he couldn't afford to go
back to jail and . . . he had to be careful about what he was doing.' After she convinced D
she 'wasn't a cop,' he gave her a note, to present to a woman named Stella, which read: 'Saw
Cheryl. Give her a pair of pants [signed] Cal.' The agent concluded her testimony by stating
that she then left D, used the note to introduce herself to the dealer Stella, and purchased
an orange balloon containing heroin. D contends that he had asked her to come and see him
because he was 'fed up with her' and wanted her to quit calling him at the hospital where he
worked because he was afraid she would cause him to lose his job. He insisted he told her
during their conversation that he did not have anything; that he had spent more than 23
years in prison but now he had held a job at the detoxification center for four years, was
on methadone and was clean, and wanted the agent to stop 'bugging' him. D claims that the
agent persisted in her efforts and after more than an hour of conversation when she asked
for a note to introduce her to a source of heroin he agreed to give her a note to 'get her
off . . . [his] back.' D told her that he did not know if Stella had anything, and gave her
a note which read: 'Saw Cheryl. If you have a pair of pants, let her have them.' The case
was given to the jury. D was convicted of both counts. D appealed. The first count was
overturned on an erroneous Allen charge instruction (mini-dynamite charge to a deadlocked
jury). D urges that his conviction on the second count must be reversed because the trial
court erred in failing to instruct the jury sua sponte on the defense of entrapment.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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